My husband and I are both down with covid, so this seems like the right time for a post on the caladrius. We don’t know all the details of what a caladrius looks like, but we do know it’s a bird with pure white feathers. Sometimes it seems to look like a dove, but at other times it’s got longer legs and beak like a small heron or egret, and sometimes it’s practically a duck. But the important thing about it is its magical power. When someone is ill, the caladrius perches on their sickbed and inspects them. If the patient is doomed, the caladrius turns its head away and all hope is lost. However, if the patient can be saved, then the caladrius gazes in their eyes and draws their sickness into itself. It then flies up to the sun, where the germs (or whatever) are burned away, leaving both the patient and the caladrius pure and healthy once again.
The caladrius was discovered by the ancient Romans but was enthusiastically embraced by the bestiary-writers of the medieval era. Of course, most of them never had the chance to see an actual caladrius because they’re very rare and the only people who could actually keep one around were kings. Still, there are lots of great illustrations of the caladrius at work. The first ones are the classic iconography: a man is shown lying in bed with the bird sitting at his feet. Often the man is wearing a crown, and you know you’re a king when you wear your crown even when you’re lying sick in bed. Heavy is the head, indeed. (Even though the crown is very common, I’ve got only one in today’s selections because I was going for variety.) As for the caladrius, sometimes it’s depicted looking at
the patient, and sometimes it’s turned away. Some scholars have speculated that whether or not the caladrius is optimistic in its prognosis is correlated to how dire and dismal things actually were in the area at that time in history. (I think this would be a fabulous topic for a thesis I don’t intend to write, but if you do, please let me know your results!) I love how miserably ill the king looks in the first image - and I’m not just being cruel and heartless to laugh at his expression, because I know he’ll recover fully.
However, sometimes the artist includes both options in the picture, no doubt sort of like the little diagram in the instruction sheet of the covid test that shows the difference between positive and negative results. I like how in image three the patients have the facial expression appropriate to their diagnosis.
My next little collection shows things a little differently. In the first one (image five) it looks like a doctor - or perhaps the Keeper of the Caladrius - has brought in the bird to examine the patient. In image six the patient looks a bit corpse-like, but his wife(?) is smiling at him, weak with relief, as the caladrius flies up toward the sun, bearing the man’s illness away with it.
As for image seven, I included it because I love the way the caladrius and the patient are staring at each other. The bird seems to be smiling slightly, but the man looks like he doesn’t appreciate the scrutiny. He ought to be grateful, as the alternative is shown right there in the same panel, with a different colored background in a sort of “Sliding Doors” scenario.
And image eight is here because I was trying to find more wood block print illustrations of the caladrius. Most of the ones I found just show a completely generic-looking bird, not doing anything distinctive. That style of illustration occurs in many of the hand-illuminated bestiaries, as well, in which surprisingly often the caladrius isn’t even white, which is its one distinctive physical feature. So I’ve ignored all of those pictures, because they’re no fun. This wood block print, on the other hand, is much more detailed and skillful than the others in the book and I suspect the printer happened to have it around from another project. This patient is clutching a crucifix, and since the bird has turned its back, that’s really the only option left to him.
As for our plague house, I don’t think we need a caladrius. Obviously it would be lovely to have the sickness instantly drawn out of us and carried away to the sun, but I feel pretty confident that we’ll pull through eventually in any case.
[Pictures: Caladrius, illumination from Bestiary, 1226-1250 (Image from Bodleain Libraries);
Caladrius, illumination from Bestiary, 1236-1250 (Image from British Library);
Caladrius, illumination from Bestiary, 1200-1225 (Image from Bibliothèque nationale de France);
De Charadrio, wood block print from Tou Hagiou Patros (Physiologos) by Saint Epiphanius, 1587 (Image from Biodiversity Heritage Library);
Caladrius, illumination from Bestiary, 1275-1300 (Image from Bibliothèque nationale de France);
Caladrius, illumination from Bestiary, 1225-1250 (Image from Bibliothèque nationale de France);
Caladrius, illumination from the Peterborough Psalter and Bestiary, 14th c. (Image from Cambridge University);
Caladrius, wood block print from The noble lyfe & natures of man by Laurence Andrew, 1521 (Image from Internet Archive).]
4 comments:
Sorry to read of your illness. Hope you get well soon.
What an interesting topic, Thank you. I hope you both will get well with no Caladrii needed.
I never heard of a Caladrius before, and a bit of googling got me to the calandra lark, the name of which stems from the Greek name "Kalandros" of this bird ... which interestingly is not white either, I do not know if this is even the same word.
And it's living in the house of the king, well I'm not going to search our royal palace looking for this bird. I might use it for my "Tale of Magic in the Nordic Countries".
Thanks for the good wishes! We're both over it already now.
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